Sound Research WIKINDX

List Resources

Displaying 1 - 2  of 2 (Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography)
Parameters
Order by

Ascending
Descending
Use all checked: 
Use all displayed: 
Use all in list: 
Crowder, R. G. (1993). Auditory memory. In S. McAdams & E. Bigand (Eds), Thinking in Sound: The Cognitive Psychology of Human Audition (pp. 113–145). Oxford: Clarendon Press.   
Added by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard 06/05/2008, 15:43
Proceduralists assert that there is a precategorical memory of auditory events -- precategorical being memory of acoustic sensations before cognition and meaning are applied.
There are two academic camps on auditory memory: the storage position whcih theorises that there are areas of the brain dedicated to memory (for audio, an echoic store) and the proceduralist position whcih claims that there are no such specific stores and that memory of an event resides wherever the processing of that event took place as a residual of the process.
Evans, D. (2001). Emotion: A very short introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.   
Added by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard 28/05/2011, 07:52
Remembering is never precise because items in memory are not recorded in their fine details. They are filed under keywords; these are extrcted and "educated guesswork" fills in the blanks. "It is more like reconstrcuting an antique pot from a few broken shards than replaying an old movie" (p.80).
WIKINDX 6.9.0 | Total resources: 1303 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA)